Scientific News Computers, Internet, Software, Household and Office Equipment GSM-technology OPTICAL ANTENNA BRINGS BENEFITS TO WIRELESS NETWORKS, HOUSEHOLD ELECTRONICS AND DATA TRANSFER
OPTICAL ANTENNA BRINGS BENEFITS TO WIRELESS
NETWORKS, HOUSEHOLD ELECTRONICS AND DATA TRANSFER
A new optical
antenna, developed by researchers
at the University of Warwick, will bring significant benefits to credit card
payments, wireless networks, household electronics and longer distance data
transfer.
The device was developed by Professor Roger Green
and Roberto Ramirez-Iniguez, in the University of Warwick's Engineering
Department. It applies techniques used to manipulate radio frequencies to select
the incoming "signal frequencies" carried on infrared beams to produce
the optical equivalent of the radio.
The new optical antenna has now been licensed to
Optical Antenna Solutions of Nottingham which will be responsible for further
development and marketing world-wide. Derick Wilson, Managing Director of
Optical Antenna Solutions, believes the technology provides enormous benefits to
several industries, and has significant commercial opportunities. One of the
first applications being considered is to use the antenna to provide secure
practical "point and pay methods" for credit cards. The company will
unveil the new technology for the first time at the Comdex exhibition in Las
Vegas on 18th November.
The optical antenna serves the same purpose as an
electronic one. It must collect energy from an area and channel it through to a
receiving element or, conversely, transmit energy which has originated from a
small source over an area.
This new device uses a combination of precise
curvatures on the lens part of the instrument with a multi-layered filter. The
optical antenna is so precise that it can detect a signal on one particular
wavelength of light and it is 100 times more efficient at gathering in a signal
than any previous optical sensor of this kind. This has immediate benefits for
indoor wireless networks and household devices. It allows signal transmitters
and receivers to operate at a significant angle to each other and to
discriminate much more finely between signals. For external data transfer
applications it can be used to greater distances - up to 3 miles.
Wireless networks are an economical and flexible
alternative to wired systems. Lately, two major transmission technologies have
been used to achieve indoor wireless communication: RF (radio) and infrared. For
many reasons infrared is often preferred - infrared links provide high bandwidth
at low cost, infrared is immune to radio interference, the spectrum is freely
available, and infrared components are inexpensive, small and consume little
power. This new optical antenna will help turn even more people towards infrared
as an alternative to the high cost of maintaining wired networks.
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Note for editors there is a 300 dpi pic of
Prof Green with a large scale model of the lens of the antenna at http://www.warwick.ac.uk/services/publicity/Pict/greenoa.jpg
For further details please contact:
Professor Roger Green, University of
Warwick,
Tel: 44-247-652-3133 Roger.Green@warwick.ac.uk
mobile 44-785-590-1515 (NB Roger is in London on thurs 7th nov on this number on
that day he will be availble on his mobile/cell phone number from 12.30 UK
time).
Peter Dunn, Press Officer, University of
Warwick Tel: 44-247-652-3708 p.j.dunn@warwick.ac.uk
Brian Dolby, GBCS PR Tel: 44-115-950-8399, brian@gbcspr.com
Contact: Roger Green, roger.green@warwick.ac.uk,
44-247-652-3133, University
of Warwick
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a University
of Warwick
Publishing date: November 20, 2002
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